Some of you may be aware that I spend my Saturdays docenting at the
International Printing Museum (in Carson, California). For some years now, I've been the acting lead Linotype operator. The reason for this is that we lost our previous lead Linotype operator to "hoof-in-mouth disease."
As a museum docent, there are three things you just don't do:
1. Unless you work for, say, the George W. Bush Presidential Library, you don't wear your politics on your sleeve.
2. You do not knowingly or intentionally say or do anything to cause unnecessary discomfort to fellow docents, paid staff, board members, or people who fall into more than one of those categories.
3. You
never ever intentionally or knowingly say or do anything to cause unnecessary discomfort to visitors, paying or otherwise.
We all have occasional lapses, but we acknowledge them and learn from them. Unfortunately, my predecessor, though anybody who knows him will agree that he's "mostly harmless," and though he taught me most of what I know about running linecasting equipment,
could manage to do all three of those things in a single utterance. Nobody wanted to see him go, but we had to, for the good of the Museum.
Jeopardy seems to be in a similar situation.
Have people checked Micheal Davies background yet?
Hmm. In addition to
Millionaire, he also produced
Wife Swap and a revival of
The Newlywed Game. Not exactly sterling credentials.